Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Canadian Post (Lindsay, ONT), 2 Mar 1894, p. 4

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0‘ 4,". “nun-n» Jam}- ...: . v“ ~MW‘GNh‘W-Himk:h. ._ . ‘ vy~ 2 Guticurs Remedies. SBRUFULA l2 YEAR Always Sore. Face Burned Like Fire. Ashamed to be Seen. Four Doctors but Little Benefit. Cured ‘cy Cutlcura. For about ten or twelve years I have been I troubled With serofuln. My head- was alwa 's sore, my face was dry and scaly-,and burned li 0 fire most of the time. My body had big red spots on it, and I did not know what to do. I went‘ to four different doctors and they hel led me at firSS. In the In I got worse again; then I trie other remedies. but they did me no good. I was ashamed to go into public. I was a sight to IOOK at. Every one would say. “What is the mat- ter, rvhv don’t you take some- thing?” Even at my daily labor I had to wear a. sort of cap to keep the dirt from "fitting into the sores. After I would washfi would be covered with big red pimples ‘ . “neck and face. Sumt- two or three tl‘ ‘crrct’rm Runw- . . .. ..nd 1 have done so. Glad to .. J 1 air: an. ll . wand in the best of health since. I cannot 31min: thCCL‘TICUIlA 333112935 too hifniy’. I enclose my portrait. LEll'ls' \v . £41205, LarksviL'e, Pa. 1’ fit?!) CUTIEURA “final il'flllllflis Cmcrrm Rmotvtxr. the new Blood and Skin Purifier internally ' ":nnse the blood of all impurities and p0 . .5. elements» and Curt- crrm, the "teat skin :u. with Ccrrcm SOAP, an erqui e :in I’m er and Beautifier, ex- ternal} to ur the skxzi and scalp and restore the he . cur».- crery disease and humor of the skin, gulp and blood. with loss of hair, from. infancy to age, from pimples to scrofula. when the best physicians, and all other remedies fail. "Sold throughout the world. Price. Cmct’ln, Me; com, but: ;:Esnr.‘.'r:.'T,$l.50 l‘orrrzu DRUG A52) (,uEM. Conn, 591»; Proprietors, Bordon. c2- “ How to Cure Skin Diseases,” mailed free. | PLES, blackheads, rod, rough. chapped and. 0.1;; skin cured by CL‘TlCCIu SOAP. :‘1‘ i RHEUMs’iTlC PAlilS GURED. , In one minute the Cuticurs Ant!- ,9 Palmrlaster relieves rheumatic. sci. l .\ mzc. mp. money, chest. and muscular '3 pains and vacant-fies. I’r:cc,25c. ‘Elzc tiauzuliau gum. D434 | >in-.‘. Tifi'EXICAN BELLE. An Intensely int: restlng Tale of Life in Austria una Mexico. Synopsis of Prccccdiny Chaptcrs. l’i'lfl :tml Max llinlenhuh, ":1 the death of their father m-rc left mull Nllllf’l‘lill an C‘Lillc which one of fin: ilrnullm‘. r-f [\lhlflllll lumzmw hu-l done its best to uivzwn-li-r. Th:- mm only reduced their income further Ilntl iii-exiled, In order to repair the {\Inily firm- u, to \lllllt’ in marriage Wuhlicr, son oi Fklix. AM H! \m daughter nf .‘vlnx Swim iunclvr pn'ungeu m: w. H, :.,.1“,.,.n (,huruuqnu unit-n ‘9:le Ili-u‘m'ermg “15'. lm ln'vlhvr'.‘ \"ih'kl'l \VN hum-lowly involved. (rlll'l"l lllfi «m to think nu mun: nl ”than MIX, i-v- till . .1 lllflll {Mm ha 1- ”their. we it in lilo, With hln :‘uiigh‘i'f i . ,\l« \i\"v “here [my were mum lost. to .gh' ml ,\ Hiwi- rljl‘lll'IllV ’l'un pour! iiuvr Walther murr'ul 'i1!‘l.l|l:l\'l""'l n anon ll Inlwr, “lm lived but. kl W \ - .IH Mill “ll wt‘ lurrmw qu umn minced. \\ he» he “fury "mum, in lhT'J. llirun \anlhnr hucl lwmi hm; m lunl m'fillli :llni lilthlu-t «in, Arm ll. bml re-igm-il lulu univvniuw in Ihu army lnmnnuun hlu hill-ii"- :ilhiru 'l‘ho \ Hunger mm, Utrn, whu was in the army V». .i inn-l-mmr ltlluv umhxlwm m In! rlrl. unnl «lw-,I'\ intvz‘uiml in .l mul‘hy l‘i-lhh llUlY. tho (‘I unlvw ll-illm, 'l'hv‘ hum-4m: \‘lnlil. Gabrielle, A girl of 'u\ll mi, Wu .iu “Hull-l, Ono nun-iii”; .\ll|u’|l inu'w limit. A lmul paper a l-nrngmhh (hi. 1: (rum n .\lv\n'.ui lumlml, whli-h nunumu'ml lhu ilt‘zlfli nl. llm ugo u! M‘U'Itl) of Mr Maximilian ll-ulen, nr limlcnlnwh .l \tunllh) guntlu- man 1 filter“ ,1 Austria who hml livlt )ll‘ mihru furluhu In In! «Km ',‘_l|'.('l' MI“ Ull'sm llmwuhuuh Mu\1 il.|u.'||lur ”him, wu- l\.u \"mi‘v. \‘nlluubf‘ Lnun Baron “’Allilul‘ullll‘llli unmarried and Huron \l'ultuci'n old imnlcrwu return- Alh-r it hinmv i-nnfrru'n‘c Ari-oil writes a lender and uyitiliutliutlc letter In hi1 aunt" «hum, wncicm lm tells her 0‘ thru‘ ~Lruilenoil circuumunwn and (luv. u rcpuynwut U! the huu in llr‘l‘ fulhur will he usurp! imp, Ullvlu ullrm‘crs. lirulizlsing‘ Town “will and lll\llc\ Arllnlil Lu cunm Ln .\lc\n:u in \‘lslt ildl‘ llll'. Uilo H HI dam. uinl want: money In marry Haiku, und culllltn on noun; :3 gaunt-r i! no u -u.- In Mexico, Ile null) pdeMlx nu Aruwll h- lct him go instead. .‘luxivmuhcru he 1“ graciously Otto gut-s to ll» nit-cu her companion u received my his mum. young girl, the Fraulein melt. Win- In [hmVCHSvd of wonderful heuu'y. Uttn . nun 1|. snuff. lune Vlaltlllu’ his aunt until he l‘ conunw'cly in lure With Reu'n During Otto‘s abccllcu l‘uron Walther reviews his plum for his ch:lalrcu. Otto he inteuih ihull marry the Countess Hslku. und his so“ Arnold ha urges to advance his suit with llermmc Sn‘liereudorf, the daughter of a wealthy and aristocratic neighbor of the baron. ‘ . . Bel-mum ls at present vxsrtmg Baron Wulther's llmll)’. Otto proposes to F nulcin ileum, and later is put in posseuuon oi a uupj of the will of .‘iluximilinn Boden- bach, his neck, by which he sees that he and Arnold are left the sum of L‘ 000 tlonns yearly each, and his father 10.000 florins A further immense sum will descend to Otto and Arnold provided neither contract a. plebeim mirriuge. Otto becomes curious to know more of Rea'u's antvcedents, and is told that none of them are noole lle decides that he will forfeit the money mthx than Rent: and leaves for Austria utter arranging the: Rents is to keep the engagement 3. secret. and is to accompany his aunt to the family home at Steinbuhe in the spring, when they will marry. " ~ cm .3. 0n the passage home Otto thinks‘mucb of Rents. and the will. and of Countess Hulka and his old rival. Capt. Kreidich. He does not return home but st once joins ms regiment. in Poland. near the home Of Countess Haiku, and writes letters to the family describing his trip to Mexico, bu: does not mention Beats. Arno suspects something. but knows not what. Otto wdires Ream several letters. and in reply to a dim t q ie-rt on admits that he has uotyetinform- ed the family oi his engagement In the meantime be thanks be Wlll avoid Uountessl-Ialks, but zraduslly drifts info the old intimacy. . â€"-.â€" ( Continued from last week ) Otto glanced furtively towards the drawer where he had safely locked away his sketch-book. “Something like that, I suppose; I really can’t say,” and before he had got through the phrase a deadly shame seized upon his heart; every fibre that was noble in him recoiled before the meanness; his honor and his conscience cried out for the truth. Was it not as if he had renounced his right to Rests? He could have gone out and wept bitterly, like the weak apostle when he denied his Master. A minute ago he might still have told all to his brother, and would have bud the right to except his sym- pathy; now with his own words he bud built himself up a barrier, and he lacked the courage to throw it down again with his own hands. He turned swsy abrupt. ly to hide the blood which he felt rising to his face snd throbbing hotly in his temples, for in the middle of that stinging sense of shame the first instinct was to hide its expression from his brother’s eyes. His movement was so sbrupt. and done with such perfect dis- ragsrd to the surroundings, that it brought him for the second time smash up against the table; and Arnold, brushing put at the other side, finished upthut rickety and much-tried piece of furniture; it tot end for I moment, snd then with a resounding era-h came down on its side, heart-.3 lump into omnibus Mend lowing the brothers insbsolute dsrknas. , lagain. i‘:«‘_l_l_)_AY. MARCH 2 . - Sch-duct, whose out, and would without difficulty be quoted again: undoubtedly now it was Otto’s best course to keep Arnold .m the belief thst all was right between bun and I The thread of the conversshon had ,been broken by the smash, and Arnold I did not attempt to resumedt; only, in Q leaving his brother for the night, he said "‘You will come to the ice, will you not, Ottc?’ and he was surprised by the readiness with which Otto answered- “Oh yes, of course I wtllâ€"l always imeant to; only I hate being badgered i into anything." l CHAPTER XXII.â€"AN ICE-QUEEN. i The ice next. day was thronged with d the whole society of Rzeszolow. It was Sunday, and many people who could not ; spare time for such friVOlous employment i on week days, were here to'-rlay to e: 1 \y i theme lves once in a way. It was 111- re. 1 our, a. brilliant winter’s day, with a clear lsunshine tempering the sharpness of the lair, and showering sparkles over every- ! thing. Even the big grey crews were i slightly cheered up by the general bright- 5 ness ; they came down u-lf their branches i and hopped about the ic: clumsily, look- ing starved and lanky, and nor in the least disturbed by the presence of_the skaters. There were fringes of icicles laloug the earth-banks of the lake, and the bushes that hung over were laden with crystals. At the far end the bul- rushes grew in clumps, straight out of the ice ; and here and there a few taller ' feathery reeds mixed with lthem, and these drooped heavily which the frost had laid on them, as if overpowered with their own magnificence. But this was far at the other end of the lake, almost out of sight of where the skaters were. They iseemedaureat number: but when you ‘came to look nearer, it Was only the smaller half that were skaters, the rest spectators; and only the smaller half again of the skaters could skate at all. The fashion of ladies skating had only sprung up lately in those regions, and mist of the ladies who had skates on [.0- { day were clinging helplessly to their male supporters, giving vent to their terror by lvmously articulated exclamations. or in extreme cases by shriek: ; at the best, mnvmg along cautiously, watching the progress of their feet with nervous anxiety and seeking with outspread arms to keep up their balance. This was what the general run of the ladies did : there were a. few among them who had arrived at. a higher stage of the art; but there was only we who skated perfectly. A couspicious figure among the specta- tors was Piotr, who, waiting to carry home his master’s skates, was whiling away the time by sliding about in u decidely sprawling fashion, his progress slightly impended by a giuntic prayer- hnok held under his arm. It was one of Piotr-'5 principles to carry about a. large prayer-book on Sundays, even if he had not time to go go to church. A full figure in (lurk velvet was sweep- ii g down the ice, alone, unsupported and freiâ€"pust the various groups of uudicnco and tho ntruggling line of beginnersâ€" puut the peasant sludges which had paused for u minute in their trnnuit across the hike at this unwcnted aucctnule ; and then when ahc had almost ruched the straight, «till hunk, when it seemed in if in thut lightning speed she must duh against it wuhouhhc power of stopping, a quick turn. A slight movement of her feet, and she had faced round, and stood pausing for a moment, creel. and motionless, calm and unconcerned. Comtcue Halku, of course. Standing there on she did in the shadow of the overhanging bank, her dress looked black; but when the sun- shine caught it at the edge of the folds, you could see that it. was blue, an intense dark shade of blue. She was very much muflled in a. blue fox-fur ; it nestled round her throat and round her Wrists, and bands of the same fur crossed her velvet skirt. If it is true that nothing is more dis- tressing to witness than an awkward skaLer, it certainly is as true that one of the pleusuntest things to watch is a. woman who skates both well and grace- fully; for the one does not necessarily go with the other. I have known men who declare that no form of feminine grace can excel this one. After this prelimin- ary, it is almost unnecessary to say that Comteaso Hulka. was one of those women who skate both Welland gracefully. If she had not known thisâ€"if she had thought it possible that she could in any point fall short of the highest standard of skating, or if she had not felt assured that she was unapproached in her art by any one lady on the Rzeszolow iceâ€"then Comtesse Halka would not have skated at. all; she would rather have renounced her favorite pastime than expose herself to be rivalled in it by another woman. Hers was not one of those natures who delights in the excitement of endeavor-lug to outshine s rival. If she could not do it without a visible effort, than rather would she keep aloof from the scene. She could not bear to do anything which she did not do to perfection, and she was quicker than most women in finding out what she could do well and what she could not, and had the wisdom to refrain from doing those things which she was aware of not doing well. Thus, although her voice had been carefully trained, and was of considerable compass, she never sangâ€"well aware thst her organ was not one likely to captivate the ear. For this reason she had trained herself to speak always in u subdued voice. A refinement of vanity, all this, if you will; but how many inflections would bespured to society if unity oftener adopts this form! If vanity is to beâ€"as long no women are n will beâ€"surely this isut least aggnvating garb, but not ll! most innocent one. While Halka stood in the shadow of the bank, Otto sksted up to her. follow- ing up the same line she hsd taken, wheeling round quickly in the some wsy she had done, though not perhups with such finished skill. Otto hsd spoken to the Comtesse before. that afternoon; but just then be funcied that Arnold wss lolking restless, 'snd was wutching him, and s little conversstton with the Com tease would soon quiet bimsgsin. Ho ofl'ered himself with a. word, the Accepted him, s movement, sud then they flew over the foe together, dispersing the shtcn right sud lefi; some ubufiod outof the way. grumbling, others laughing; the comm stood admiring sud gaping Is that dork velvet figure shot through their “Ah, list is wht I all skating!”'suid eyeglass- bud follow- les-oning figures. "‘It. thou-me to ha whether 0‘ the .3931! plums tabs of! show desirable to be stiained ; it must necessari- 1y call upon the strength very much, and any appearance of putting out strength detracts from the charm of alady skating. No doubt there are many woman who skate well backwards ; but amongst ten of them, nine will offend your eye by the suggestion of vigour in their movements, and only the tenth will glide along with that effortless swif ners which resembles the graceful swaying of a bird poised in mid-3i '. “What a. nwisa there is going on over there!" said Haiku to Otto, arresting her- self in her backward skimming, and standing still on the skates, wizbl-er head turned towards the skaters. They were folersbly far out towards the middle of the lake, quite separate from the others, and shrieks and laughter and canine howls reached them faintly through i the still winter sir. “Somebody been run over, I suppose. I can’t conceive what makes them all stay together in a. heap, and getting into each ' other’s way, when they ‘haVe the whole lake to go upon.” “Gregarinus instinct, probably,” re- marked flalka, with a slight sniff of her aristocratic nostrils. “It is much pleasan- ter out here ; do you not think so? ’ Of course Otto thought so, and said so ; how could it be Otherwise? Hulku was still standing with her head a little turned, as i.‘ listening to the sounds ; und Ohio, standing a few paces off and looking at her, was struck by the finished grace of her pose, the angle at which she held her head, the clear pink color which exercise had brought into her face,â€"for her faded ccmplexiotl freshened wonderfully under the influence of the sharp winter air ; her eyes were shining brightly under this i:.fluence or perhaps under another. And 1 she stood there still, apparently intent on the sounds over there, and yet perfectly aware of Otto admiring gaze, knowing exactly how each detail and circumstance was working its effects on himâ€"knowing exactly how even the surroundings of the moment, h)w even the paleness of the winter sky, the banks of snow in the distance, even the perspective of frozen tree-branches behind her darkly-clad figure, were sefling her off to the fullest advantage,â€"â€"an ice-queen in the midst of her territory! 1 think they are all picked up again,’ she said, burning her head back towards him; “they are quiet, at. least. flow pretty it looks over there near the creek where the reeds growl” looking across “Only fancy, I must do i the lake in that direction. I have never been there yet! it some day.” “Why not to-duy?" said Otto, with empressment. “No, I think not, Baron Bodcnbuch,” replied Haiku, after a moment's hesita- tion, in which she had rapidly weighed the pros and cons of his suggestion; “the sun is getting rather low slready, and I um tired too. Next Sunday I nhull be coming in again, and We can do it then. perhaps.” She was looking fired; the color had faded out of but check again. It is just that effortless, bird-like style of skating that is the moat tryingâ€"for, sftor Ml, nature has not given us wings; and if me, for n time, manage to keep up a. tolerable imitation of flying, she will have her revenge. “You hove been doing too much, Com- tcue, for the beginning of the season," said Otto. “Strength will only come when you get into the habit sgsiu." “But I begun my lesson the other dsy already; I was in here, you know, lnt Monday." She looked s.esdily at Otto us she said this, as if to keep him from denying that be had known she wu there. Otto did not attempt to deny, but be felt somehow a little ashamed of himself. “That day I was out till very lute; it was partly Captain Kreislicb's fault, for he insisted on taking me off for such a long distance in the chair. “That is probably what bus knocked you up,” said Otto, shortly, feeling as if Kreishch had done him an in j ury. “Nonsense! how can it knock me up to sit quiet in a chair? It is rather} who should reproach myself with knocking him up, for he sprained his ankle that day, and I fear that is why he is not here to-dsy.” To this Otto made no answer; and perhaps she interpreted his silence rightly, for she added, “I am not so far gone as you think; I shall beable to get back quite well with the help of your hand.” “You must take both my hands, this way crossed; it is much more resting." And then slowly the two sailed back over the ice towards the Others. Arnold, watching them, and having watched them for some time, felt himself greatly relieved by all he had seen during the last half-hour. They had none off, Otto holding her hand; they had spent some time away apart from the others, alone with each other; and now they were returning, Otto holding both her hands, and they were coming slowly, not in a. hurry to rejoin the crowd. Otto, us he came nearer, saw a well- pleased look on Arnold’s face, and I well- pleased twinkle in Arnold's eye, and congratulated himself on the successful manner in which he had maunged to soothe down Arnold’s disquietudo. Sure- ly after this there would be no more danger of sermons and good advice! When he was within shouting dist-nee, Otto shouted to his brother to bring the chair as the Comtesse ,wss tired. It is u busty feeling to step on to the foot-board of a chair of that sort with skstes on your feet, sad the help of Otto’- arm was necessary to seat Hulk. ssfely. “There, give 3 hand, Arnold," aid Otto to his brother, and the light wooden chair, pushed by two strong men, run along at n speed that was slmost slum- ing; the Comteue lesnt back with he: ususl lsnguid once. “How fut were ore gomg!" she ssid, turning her head bslf round towsrds them ; "bsveu’t we come out far enough? we see getting uesrly into the middle of the lske sgs'nâ€"it is too much trouble for you to take.” _ Arnold looked to his brother to spank â€"9lesrly it us: his place ; And .Otto pun- sumg lns system of quigting, readily answered something to the efl‘eet tbst there was no quunon' of houble but simply of plasma. and that he would be dolnghtodtopuuh he: in this way u utboNortb’Pole, etc, out: to If: i l; m seemg' tbings'in'snfi a. said something M sucrose ‘- is .3? a f. 9 going u smoothly us possible." he suid. not referring to the progress of the sledge over the ice; “be only wanted a little touching up, and now I can love things i) work for themselves.” “Were you us for us this the other day?" asked Otto, bending down s little. “Oh no. not half," she snswered look- ing up at him for a moment with u smile that was not quite her usunl wuy of smiling, which people culled so cold. “I think you push the choir faster then Cuptuin Kreislich; but us you no not going to take me to the North Pole, sup~ posing we turn?” The sun wu very neur setting behind the line of low purple hills; dusk was still some little way ofi‘, but the frosty brilliancy was gone from the lake. the sparkles end the showers of diamonds from the trees and the grasses, the icicles along the earth-bunks were no longer shining crystals but dull grey glass: new the sunshine was gone, you could feel how bitter was the host’s hsrd bite. The big grey crows fluttered up bewiy to their branches, and settled down again wearily to their cold night’s rest. In the space of ten minutes the lskc was deserted. It was to soothe Arnold, of course, thst Otto wrapped up the Comtesse csrefully In her heavy fur cloak ; sud slso to soothe Arnold that he handed her into the sledge sud wronged the covers round her feet with such midnous stteution. CHAPTER xxm.â€"nmrrmc. During the remaining days of his brother’s visit, Otto did not get a. single word of good advice; nordid Arnold in any ' wuy recur to that subject which had been discussed on tint evening when they bud knocked over the table between them â€"he was quite satisfied with the progress of sfl'urs, and Otto wu nits sstufied st having satisfied him. Of course, when Arnold wu no longer there to wstcb, it would be easy, be thought, to drop out of hi] sttendsuce on the Contests; it was guch s simple expedient be bud chosen to Insure pence to himself snd'rost to his brother’s mind. Arnold went out to cull st Suybinico, sud Otto went with him; not very wi ' - ly, a he told himelf, but become.“ would hsve sppenred so Immoly suds to-semsm behind when his brother was going. Poles ere slqu hospitable, sud “ I I lOBENGULA MASSAGRE. THE WONDERFUL Undue). Feb. ”lb. lassâ€"co. onthisooccslontbooldOountwu' portibulsrly hospifuble. The visitors were retained for dinner; then when, an hour she: the lengthy med, they rose to tube their lesve, it was declared 'Inbcssb THE, CANADIAN POST, LINDSAY, ONTARIO. nu all r] you’ll see when you come in. little over half what they should be. and repent afterwards. \‘r'm- «44 MARCH‘z' The Butcherâ€"y by the deuge. African Chief “Not in it!” Gough Bros. Merciless Annihilation of High Priced Clothing! We are on the war path again, and when we shoot we shoot to kill. loaded to the muzzle with B119 Bargains in the Best of READY-MADE CLOTH- ING, GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, HATS, CAPS, Etc. TO THE PEOPLE BELONG THE SPOILS. We have finishing Stock-Taking, and the result of the year’s buseness has i '- satisfied our most sanguine expectations. prosperous, and we man ever to heap . us for the cpmng, and as the season for selling winter goods will soon. be overâ€" AN AWFUL GUT ' Is to be made in Prices, so as to carry over as little as 03.9in ' n alwmvsfiold the fort at GOUGB’B, but the balance of our Wvgtter Sgckzgifcfoqdzifi; the chatcest and most safzsfgtng lmes of the GREAT JAMES O’BRIBN cf; 00's STOCK 0F CLOTHING. well be slaughtered without mercy, and clean as out of d. Record for Breaking Prices. The time is short and we suggest early purchases. Come. and don’t be in a hurry looked over in half an hour and buyers want to have ti .“ Whether you spend :35 cents. or $25, we take the risk offavtfig 3311‘]; 2;: aimed m“ m the“. We may repent our rauhness. but we will. sell first GOUGâ€"IE-I BROTHERS. cum MEN, 'rououuce sit-ting; sud probably in the ‘ melted iron. It was s herd fight to keep mealtime the frost would breuk up and facilitsto bis «cups. It won quite any; the whole thing wu on clear a possible in his mind. And sohe went thst Sun- duy, sud took Hulk. to the seeds and buck min, sud found that it bud been on the whole rather plenum then other- use. After tbst. the frost did not break up yet. . A Polish frost is not like our English ones, which step in for two days at a time, coming in so oonvenialtly in novels for 3 chapter or so, just st the moment when the hero is to be made jeslous or inconstsut; sud u soon as this desirable result bus been uttuined, to melt may as conveniently in the next. A Polish frost is s stern hsrd reslity. keeping its iron grub unrelaxed for weeks, sometime months. This particu- lu- frost .luted even long enough for the csptun's severely-spnined unkle to get cured, ensble him to rest mo skating, and constant sttendsnco on the Comte-so. Neither did Otto renounce sksting yet, nor did he even begin come lute: on the days when the Comte-so was there. Whether it was lndolence or ennui, or inclination for mything else, or hsbit, I cannot say. tht bond is strunger to hold a. weak man that the weak bond of habitlâ€"«so easy to back through with one resolute wrench, but so much pleusnter (Continued uncouth page.) Prue- Mm “Thewsrdeutoldms testify, sir, end I stripped ...... And still I dldn't believe he would whip me. I thought buns: waited to scare me. “Thonhotcldmetofsconototholsddor Idldsqsudmcbedmysrmsuptotbs Imps. They showed my Inns to the lsdder,und stretched» had that they pulledmeupclesronaunm. Tbsnthsy stand my "I! to the MM. The 'm then m ”an...“ a...” pill is of Dr. Pierce’s invention and to”. ‘m “1'. you“. ”a. “a; '1" 18 full 0f improvements. They ire you note work amateur I sold. '80; I used by everyoneâ€"high livers, bud woa‘tgoto worktm Inst my dues.‘ And livers, those whose livers are slu - then be may“ nu; ml and the whip. ‘ -â€"all find relief in Dr. Pier-o5: Iiumsdmybudsudmuflmsndl caulduslthbheyestbuthemh strike ..... And what [new thug-In! felt thumb-(doe! me washout cabaret.” ‘I'boeouvlet pound to m up bls mmmmuham.mm nhlmmwhmw- drum-lulu Museum lieu-.tbsuydssmdbhmctbs ”moth-oust. than". Turnoutâ€"Theirefiectisladw Ga ugh Brothers. U Depleted Blood, I ,iPale Face ~~r .. of Cod-liver hypophosphitcs, I‘lches the blood, pu rifle skin, cures Anaemia, b up the system. Plzysicz'a . :vgfld over, endorse it. If"! be deceived by Suhsillu MOM Bellerillo. All Druggists. . I Fable-Agile? ‘ We are unwinrtsxxo BAT! m not line (solid type) uoupu . m'thmoonmeochaubsequem . m notices In loosl columns. Elan.“ was 60. such subseq: knoll W6 sdvertisemccu: sud when wuutcd. tux-ma csttla. six crotch! lines) 81.00 cash for . s m If more than eight m! ‘ m chute ls mud tto metabolite tor- - bikinis-retro:- :» emu-lunche- , ‘ .cwmort.mn KW. The buszmss has never been as n.- “:3 , - New Goods are. pouring vim. upon - ~ to Qanadmu insult. calmly". Mt pea it so. :uws OF THE W on AID FOREIGN I TE . INTERES T. m from the Telegrsph “changes. -'.l'be business pornon of Kaela. .s destroyed by fire Suturdsy .- 8200.000. -J. R. Hooper hos been sent me - I ThreeRlver-s. Que., to stand snot - the crlmlnnl court. listl was, â€"ank Becnlnger, while utters [meow ln Thompscn‘s mill, at ska. Ont.. yesterdsy, bud his rigl It 08. â€"Clhlcuao plckprckota l0(k $7M! lid $25,003 securities from u \ venue cur pussenger on Wedneu “tweet. â€"The new 5:. Peter’s rallied tonnes“: to b: err: ed for wo-n m Sand-y. 1 has burn-dc l There’s a thousand and one ‘ snaps” Our store is too big to be prices will be but LINDSAY AND PETERBORO. n 18 years. ‘ â€"A. Brim furor in (i . nlm, duct. lostthree silicon sud ten ml \60 m, h on uncounur -â€"â€"â€".- 7 I I- 7 wedding bond under Chief Fo Nerve 868123. -Smelo Mckuy. author sud dun “_ yesterduy morning in u ruilrosl Be In en lot“? 1 my had close. but I did it. And then I “M to the wonder: this: ‘Ycu've “ruck NERVE sun 1: ~. ,.,,, Colorsdo. '30 wltb . Willi. luccld blood. You've tied mL‘“, ' $030. 0.1.. for the bench: of h in he; a. up bad “a b“! m Whip u like O ;;“-An immense wureboune st 11 by m’rr-m'k or Rule. s south-esntrrn suburb of U dq. Well. whlp‘ms. than. till you All your belly with It. You m n cow-rd. l'd‘ml’ cu... m, ,,;;;*:t?.9.’.3'. L'i‘CLu burned in: Work. Thousandsc You m 10'“. “a mun". 3nd 00'“.d“, 1' $45.31: hurcfulla‘l Silk-dicinfi-ua if Bruin Dcurz-d tom 1hr 1'10 ‘ -houl thou the lowest sud moons-t dag thst ev- :- mum allp‘iigiiffilfigfi’y'fiiflj£11,. Thumefi, L3“ glimUOU. ‘ ”loud when in. auto: kicked him. You ’°’°"‘°’°“ “”‘“‘”"""*"’-“‘ -Jooeph 11: LN“ C’ “m '7‘“ were hm a com. Gama. win u. ”a 3°“ “ “'1‘“? W 5- nlflnhuguy, kill; 6 a big prairie wozr steel. sud you In the some us A thief and , _ ed 115 pounds and menuredl list. No hound would own you tuna“, Pam Killer. m can tip to tip. This wolf is Whip mo bud sud long, you cowurd. ‘- .._.______._ â€" vs filled 20 colts this sensor. and 4 WM? me, I soy. See how u good com dyuung cuttle. I feels when he use up u mun sud whip. roarâ€"“'Bushvllle, five miles noril‘l 0 him like u dog. Whip me till the lust : "‘ mile. N. Y., Jscob A. Moore-1 bmtbquits my body ; if you leave me olive ud his housekeeper. Mrs. Rsymonq I will kill you for this.‘ I, were murdercd curly Toureduy ufils face got white. He asked me if I I a. The old Infill: had a few ugly: me'un tut, sad I bald, 'ch; more God I an!) drown hJi ptngfor. of . 1». do. Then he took the whip in both mg. urderer lc urknown. and came down with sll his might." â€"Tbe New York Sun buys the Mel "Thu was burly two you. .30,” sold BEANS Farm "taken" ‘ ‘i- ll'l lime ll ml cut: 6:1..an 0,0,). DOUUEATIY ‘20 "n a! the ”N OIM Bronchitis, A 1' , rs“: .11: f. . . am 0, Lung, ‘ ”mo ‘7 xlm'e Club."hns block bullet. 1hr. l)! the choir-mun. "Y bl 30'. would you?” on would Mt kill THUS “,2 an.» lensford, ractor of ~t. G "Y 3‘551'3'Cw-10'mn: Ep sccpfl church. :‘ ~! es. I will kill bluff I get u chsnce; loggeimgeswm, or :11. club, A, ‘ You SAV much “5333"”. ll 9. st‘l') mun. ”flg-Ith official r ssuruzoe ' ' "a New Advertisemjft “new be mac n so. I . y sub 0! the c s f Sp= r. whlc “bonds the establishment of a. I one, the pnolrhmeut cf all cfl Inst Spanish authority and ti: but of on ndlqunte was in '(m'Jty, “vars WEMmâ€"It lo rumor-mi. in Luv-Lr 'hnt tti ' [Damask-he's oppo-iticn to tie: ll COPYRIGHTS'i Sslhbtry in the he be or lori-i CAN I OBTAIN "' . [7 “km ngoafiogedttofigklnt «ten toward' s new comblnuli nfikfi'figwgflgm that Mr. Gladstone is to. ”w M D mum-noun... if. :52ng radicals nod join Mr. Chsmborll‘ M an M13; all” Baked stcneblre 1n teomou'z‘1 mouth. ‘ 333- um $3325.15th W”- â€"A dupstch from Port Louls, . 2m NEW STYLE “4.“, "mun-Mr- New .me3‘ . h“ .'l 0g“! ”05311119: report! that u cyn cm- vw Emma“ .m¢m slaw-t lzcslculable mg; in am #53025“ m and killing a: d irjurlnl Nana-um; niideflL‘m, A crowded ruilwsy 1rd W seweoontxums llsw Your. 361 ”blown from the truck sud rovled “hm: lnto the Command .I. .7. Turner sunning fifty persons sud injuring number of others. Fun 3 â€"A'ioth0t phenomenal all w "E VERY “mkswris, Quinlnt wee _ during and I feelftlnmethstlhe chsnco will come.”-â€"W. C. Morrow, in March Lippln- cott’s. l l W leussnt Pellets. To 3mm vn'm, these “Pellets” are the smullest, and easiest to take. Ellieyjre may;l sugar-coated, uni. nous es fl; - takes STE“. at every child 0 SBOONDLY. â€" Th no rfectl eusy_in their Moi-no pgfiphgy no distal-bones. ’ nw oh u: the rate of 7.3 way. For the but bu f hour it ‘jnhkh on the derrlck sud was OH EXISESmm .5: mum m.“ I806 negro. who here - We. Tents. . node u living peddling vegetsb . 'mrouefve «weight cf the or ‘ . ms WM CI“ will insure him a smnll forti Eco-sum Wagon“ 4......“ domeof the .3... m M8 coats, m World's Fair ground 0. “Why Ilse Ssturdsy mornll Hats and ”My baton 7cm . gourd] rfisuutb toes of the building use: , Founm.â€" ‘ myth-ed: Put up "1 ghuâ€". , point st which previous A [at end wound ul In. but“ domes. runnln

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